Welcome

Welcome to the POZ/AIDSmeds Community Forums, a round-the-clock discussion area for people with HIV/AIDS, their friends/family/caregivers, and
others concerned about HIV/AIDS. Click on the links below to browse our various forums; scroll down for a glance at the most recent posts; or join in the
conversation yourself by registering on the left side of this page.

Privacy Warning: Please realize that these forums are open to all, and are fully searchable via Google and other search engines. If you are HIV positive
and disclose this in our forums, then it is almost the same thing as telling the whole world (or at least the World Wide Web). If this concerns you, then do not use a
username or avatar that are self-identifying in any way. We do not allow the deletion of anything you post in these forums, so think before you post.

The information shared in these forums, by moderators and members, is designed to complement, not replace, the relationship between an individual and his/her own
physician.

All members of these forums are, by default, not considered to be licensed medical providers. If otherwise, users must clearly define themselves as such.

Forums members must behave at all times with respect and honesty. Posting guidelines, including time-out and banning policies, have been established by the moderators
of these forums. Click here for “Am I Infected?” posting guidelines. Click here for posting guidelines pertaining to all other POZ/AIDSmeds community forums.

We ask all forums members to provide references for health/medical/scientific information they provide, when it is not a personal experience being discussed. Please
provide hyperlinks with full URLs or full citations of published works not available via the Internet. Additionally, all forums members must post information which are
true and correct to their knowledge.

I'm a LTS [24+ years]. I've "been there" since Day One, sorta…living in the Midwest-Ohio, AIDS took longer to get here.Having been an AIDS activist; volunteered on HIV services council; volunteered w/ gay non-profit, etc.I'm wondering; how does you live alone [no friends - family is distant], on disability/fixed income - no car…how do you keep from losing your mind? Suggestions?

Hi Rwt . I once asked that same question and then I found this forum . I credit the forum for saving a little bit of my mind that I was loosing for the living isolated , broke and feeling like I was the only one on the planet .

I hear what you are saying and I understand how hard it must be for you to find a way out of the isolation , so while you are working on a way forward , please know that there are always people here that are willing and able to lend an ear and offer support .

wherebouts in Ohio, RWT? several members are in Ohio, and I left Canton/Cleveland just a couple yrs ago and moved back to SC. When I was in Canton, I was the oldest person still living with HIV (out of a handful of 85 or so PLWHA). It was pretty lonely after all my friends and partners passed away.

Welcome from a fellow Ohioan. Isolation is almost a distant reminder of this virus. As we watched our entire rural communities dying, we didn't have the "big city" status to do anything. We watched our loved ones die horrific deaths, and some of us became numb to that hurt and pain.

But, I truly believe that all of the LTS's have a unique ability to fight. I also hope you'll find inspiration here like I have. I came here in my darkest period and have mostly figured out how to move on and have an enjoyable life. This is my wish for you this late evening also.

Logged

Complacency is the enemy. Challenge yourself daily for maximum return on investment.

RWT It's very difficult when you find yourself isolated and alone. I live in the country far from any neighbors. My son went off to college and a few months later my husband went into the hospital and died from Toxoplasmosis and multiple other infections, that's when I learned I was pos. Suddenly I was alone and my health was deteriorating fast.I had to stop working and all I had were my dogs and cats. I think they were what kept me going, I had to take care of them and they took care of me in a way. I began to write and paint, I wrote 2 novels and painted gourds as xmas ornaments, anything i could do without exerting myself too much as I was losing weight constantly despite eating as much as I could fit in (there was only AZT back then) more folks came into my life, there was a support group for a while, but 2 moved away and the rest died. I've had many people ask me how do you live alone with this, all I can say is that I always have interests and things I want to get done, but I also hosted health chats on AOL for 5 years, so that added some human contact and support. I do drive so that gives me the ability to go places. I hope this helps , at least to know that there are people who understand.

Totally get where you are coming from. Without getting into my specifics, I will say we have much in common. Many times I wanted to just give up, but some inner strength kept pushing me along. This forum has helped me tremendously as I hope it helps you. Welcome, and remember you are never really alone.

This is something I can really relate to. My partner & I spend a lot of time alone because we don't have a lot of money to spend and no car. Also people who are not long-term survivors don't understand what we go through. We tried a support group and made one good friend and he died. We also tried going to a church but when were were absent for long stretches because my partner was sick it really bothered me that no one ever called to see how is was etc and generally I felt like they didn't have time for us. So we spend our days mostly at home together and it is boring and kind of sad in a sense but thankfully we have each other. I don't know what I would do without him or if I could even stand being alone so much. I have a lot of empathy for you single long-term survivors.

lyrics: Lying in my bed, I think of youThat song goes through my head, the one we both knewIn each line lies another line full of sacred soundBut you're outside where the companies dream and the money goes roundLying in my bed.Watching my mistakes,I listen to the band they said that it could be the 2 of usThe snow might fall and write the lines on the silent pageBut you're outside making permanent love to the nuclear ageTwo silhouettes by the cash machine make a lovers danceIt's a tango for the lonely wives of the business classLying in my bedWatching my mistakesI listen to the bandLying in my bedWith nothing much to say so I listen to the manHe said that it could be the 2 of usI heard you call from across the city through the stereo soundAnd so I crawled there sickeningly pretty as the money went roundLying in my head watching my mistakesI listen to the bandAnd the drums beat in my headPianos chime the sound in this prison of the houseAnd as the illness comes again can you hear me through the rainAs I listen to the band?As I sing the silent songMime each lonely wordPlease listen to the man he said that it could be the 2 of usAlone but not lonely, you and meAlone but loaded.........

That said...by nature, I'm a loner. So not sure if my outlook on life will be of much use to you. There are ways to pass the time...reading, writing (letters to faraway friends), cow-tipping...but only if you live near farms.

Another option would be to go on line and explore potential connections. Look up all the hair dressers in towns near you. It's cliche, yes, but I bet if they're men they're gay. At least it would be a start and they probably know other men who aren't hairdressers.

I've lived long enough to relate to where you're coming from. I tested positive in '92 when I was 20 years old. I made what at the time was a logical decision. I was told I had 5-7 years of good health ahead of me so i reasoned it was pointless to finish school. I dropped out signed up for as many credit cards as I could get and worked jobs that paid cash(bartender,barback,waiter). I've travelled the world and all through the U.S. Now im 41. My parents are elderly and sick. I collect the minimum on disability and live in public housng. I didn't anticipate living this long! Now im looking at a lonely life where I am either rejected because i'm on disability or because of HIV. I literally have had guys strike up a conversation with me in a bar. We talk for 5 or 10 minutes then they ask what i do for a living. They abruptly end the conversation by not saying another word and walking away when they find out i am on disablity. I would give anything to meet the right man and live happily ever after but I think that is a pipe dream. So im chasing another pipe dream by writing about what it was like to test positve at such a young age before there was a treatment and how it changed my life. I've accepted being lonely is my cross to bear. I do a lot of praying. I ask God to give me the strength to accept his will for me.

Hi Rwt . I once asked that same question and then I found this forum . I credit the forum for saving a little bit of my mind that I was loosing for the living isolated , broke and feeling like I was the only one on the planet .

I hear what you are saying and I understand how hard it must be for you to find a way out of the isolation , so while you are working on a way forward , please know that there are always people here that are willing and able to lend an ear and offer support .

Im wishing you the best . Hugs , Jeff .

"...isolated, broke and feeling like I was the only one on the planet..." When I read this I had to make sure it wasn't one of my posts! I fought and fought to survive. Now I wonder what the hell im going to do until I die. Im not getting any younger. People aren't exactly lining up around the block for a 41 year old hiv+ bipolar man living in poverty.

I am faced with this also. My energy level is very low and it takes a certain amount of "feeling good" to want to enjoy the company of other humans. I am also more of an introvert personality and it takes a large effort for me to initiate relations. I am a single man. I struggle ,energy wise, every day just to keep my home in order/clean and cook meals and care for my little dog. Having little income is a struggle as well. The Psychologist I see encourages me to "count my blessings" as I tend to look at the rest of the world and see such riches and high life in USA and feel that I am missing out. It is easy for me to wallow in my "poverty" however when I look at my life there are many small blessings that I forget about when I wallow in this "Poverty". Indeed if I count my blessings rather than see what others are doing, feeling like I am "missing out", ...I feel better. For me this AIDS is a constant adjustment as illness, energy and loss come and go. Some days are better than other days for me. I have faced these adjustments for many years. I giggle remembering some comedy show(Saturday Night Live?) and a skit titled... "Lowered Expectations" . And I wonder how high I set the bar for myself when I am Diseased with this Virus. I try then to remember to go easy on myself. Take one moment at a time and find something positive to think about or remember the joys of the past. Then I try to incorporate some joy in my day somehow. Some small pleasure. Sometimes that is enough, sometimes it is not.None of us are alone in these feelings and I am a new member here and have found great comfort knowing I am not the only one who has these feelings/situation. Thank You everyone for your postings and honesty here in these forums as it is a great comfort to me.

Logged

We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars. ~ Oscar Wilde

Some time has passed and nothing has changed. My partner & I spending a lot of time alone together - not much money to do things, not many friends because you need money to do things and we have no car which limits us to the local bus service area. I've taken some steps to meet new friends for myself and my partner but so far it's not panning out - People often treat you differently when the find out you are sick and on disability - I'm finding people just can't be bothered. I hope someday someone will prove me wrong. Feeling isolated.

No magic answers I am afraid , I do know that loneliness can be as intense in the middle off the city as it can in the depths off the country. I am struck by the collective wisdom in this thread also I am wondering wether this epidemic off loneliness, isolation , poverty is about the age we live in, the expectations pumped out by the media we consume and the vast gap between that and the realities off most.

However I do know I will not be defeated and intend to have as full a life as possible and in some odd way this is what gets me through the worst times , and those times have been very bleak indeed.

So , all off you who have posted please come back with up dates , thoughts , create some energy even a drop created here can lead to something.

With love my dears Michael

Logged

"If we can find the money to kill people, we can find the money to help people ." Tony Benn

hello; dec 2013 is my 25th anniversary for being poz. i am lonely and have reached out to many but despite having a car so i can be with friends, i'm still alone. i would love to meet someone who is poz and compatible and have chemistry and be my life partner and get married. i keep running into guys that play games, etc. can't connect with anyone that will be monogamous and only want his partner and no one else. i am taking paxil and don't see therapist or psychotherapist. i live alone. thanks for reading, -jim

hello; dec 2013 is my 25th anniversary for being poz. i am lonely and have reached out to many but despite having a car so i can be with friends, i'm still alone. i would love to meet someone who is poz and compatible and have chemistry and be my life partner and get married. i keep running into guys that play games, etc. can't connect with anyone that will be monogamous and only want his partner and no one else. i am taking paxil and don't see therapist or psychotherapist. i live alone. thanks for reading, -jim

but a great big welcome anyway. and get and post this in the right place .As a complete born again virgin who has never had experiance in dating sites and living in the UK I am obviously the best person to poke his nose in. PUT in more off what you like/enjoy/dream about ect . Then without slandering anyone come here and start a thread off your own.

Dating for me was differcult when I was HIV- which I think it was and is for alot off folk , we just tend to forget that when the positive thing comes alone.

lots off luck and have fun and lots of forgiveness in your kissing off Princes.

Michael

Logged

"If we can find the money to kill people, we can find the money to help people ." Tony Benn